#1 out of 222.6M est. views8.68%
crime15h ago
Here's What I Learned When My Dad Finally Agreed To Tell Me About His Time At Auschwitz
- Lisa Kanarek spent two decades recording her father’s wartime memories for a lasting family archive.
- Her father Josef Kanarek survived Auschwitz and later rebuilt his life in the United States.
- The recordings cover his life in three chapters: before the war, during the war, and after.
- The films reveal the brutal experiences, including separations in the camps and a forced death march.
- Liberation brought relief as U.S. troops arrived at Bergen-Belsen, offering food and freedom.
- The project culminated in adding the father’s videos to the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum’s archive.
- Kanarek emphasizes turning painful memories into an educational gift for future generations.
- She questions why her father waited decades to share his story and what shaped his timing.
- HuffPost frames the personal narrative within the broader context of memory, history, and anti-Semitism.
- Kanarek’s article notes the ongoing importance of personal testimonies in preserving memory.
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